AIG Repays $6.9 Billion More to Taxpayers

March 8, 2011

American International Group repaid another $6.9 billion of its bailout Tuesday, the U.S. Treasury said.

With that payment, the Treasury said it has now recovered 70 percent of the $411 billion distributed under the crisis-era Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.

AIG paid the Treasury $6.6 billion from the proceeds of its sale of shares in insurer MetLife, shares it acquired when it sold its international unit Alico to MetLife last year. AIG paid Treasury another $300 million in funds it had retained for expenses related to the Alico deal.

After those payments, the Treasury still holds about $11.3 billion in preferred interests in AIG. It also owns about 92 percent of AIG’s common stock.

At Tuesday’s closing share price, the sale of that stock would generate a profit for the taxpayer of about $14.22 billion. The Treasury said it expects taxpayers to recover “every dollar” of AIG’s bailout, which at one point swelled to $182 billion.

Of the TARP funds still outstanding, about 70 percent are concentrated in AIG, finance company Ally Financial and automaker General Motors.

Any ultimate profit on the AIG shares would help offset any possible loss from the sale of the auto businesses.

(Reporting by Ben Berkowitz, editing by Matthew Lewis)

Topics AIG

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Latest Comments

  • March 11, 2011 at 4:54 pm
    Agent says:
    It is kind of like Obama answering a simple question and going on for 15-20 minutes. Nobody understood what he said. He complained that people didn't understand the Healthcar... read more
  • March 11, 2011 at 4:29 pm
    nk says:
    My eyes start to glaze over when I try to understand all the financial conversions and fandangling they have done. You need to have financial degrees to follow the trail of t... read more
  • March 10, 2011 at 2:13 pm
    Agent says:
    There is no way the taxpayers will ever see all of the 182 Billion returned no matter how many assets are sold or other complicated financial maneuvering with stock switches o... read more

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